| Literature DB >> 28583080 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The evolution of larger brain volumes relative to body size in Mammalia is the subject of an extensive amount of research. Early on palaeontologists were interested in the brain of cave bears, Ursus spelaeus, and described its morphology and size. However, until now, it was not possible to compare the absolute or relative brain size in a phylogenetic context due to the lack of an established phylogeny, comparative material, and phylogenetic comparative methods. In recent years, many tools for comparing traits within phylogenies were developed and the phylogenetic position of cave bears was resolved based on nuclear as well as mtDNA.Entities:
Keywords: Ailuropoda; Diet; Dormancy; Helarctos; Melursus; Physiological buffer; Tremarctos; Ursus
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28583080 PMCID: PMC5460516 DOI: 10.1186/s12862-017-0976-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Fig. 2Boxplots of the distribution of the residuals from PGLS (excluding Ursus malayanus and Ursus spelaeus) for Ursidae as well as result of the squared change parsimony analysis. Additionally, the relative change (in percent) of log10 body mass (g) and log10 brain mass (g) is shown in the boxes for every node. Terminal root value for log10 body size is 5.05 (112,052 g) and for log10 brain size 2.44 (277 g)
Results of body mass (g) and brain mass (g) estimates as well as residuals and investigated ecological scores
| Species | n | average body mass (g) | StD body mass (g) | average body mass literature (g) | average brain mass (g) | StD brainmass (g) | average residuals | StD average residuals | diet score | dormancy score | d*d |
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| 5 | 118'637 (105'324–135'094) | 10,748.36 | 97'500 (70'000–125'000) | 281.79 (238.28–331.52) | 33.89 | −0.0029 | 0.0548 | 1.000 | 3.000 | 3.000 |
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| 8 | 80'918 (64'223–110'621) | 15,049.56 | 117'500 (60'000–175,000) | 227.92 (176.12–279.72) | 31.33 | 0.0373 | 0.0320 | 1.814 | 3.000 | 5.443 |
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| 28 | 117'116 (83'885–155'600) | 20,168.42 | 170'000 (40'000–300'000) | 256.78 (186.48–352.24) | 38.39 | −0.0373 | 0.0422 | 1.884 | 1.000 | 1.884 |
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| 93 | 177'628 (92'655–320'042) | 40,696.57 | 390'000 (55'000–725'000) | 378.08 (207.20–538.72) | 61.38 | −0.0080 | 0.0464 | 1.637 | 1.000 | 1.637 |
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| 1 | 254,996 | - | - | 341.88 | - | −0.1770 | - | - | - | - |
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| 50 | 82'379 (56'333–108'841) | 13,709.85 | 52'500 (25'000–80'000) | 340.43 (227.92–435.12) | 47.31 | 0.2047 | 0.0403 | 2.684 | 3.000 | 8.051 |
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| 82 | 211'265 (144'141–277'270) | 33,275.87 | 402'500 (150'000–655'000) | 498.80 (393.68–611.24) | 53.75 | 0.0525 | 0.0320 | 2.970 | 2.000 | 5.940 |
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| 99 | 322'764 (209'553–425'411) | 57,207.28 | 362'500 (225'000–500'000) | 430.10 (321.16–569.80) | 52.36 | −0.1550 | 0.0443 | 1.000 | 1.000 | 1.000 |
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| 29 | 113'424 (78'533–166'402) | 21,401.65 | 120'000 (40'000–200'000) | 282.58 (186.48–414.40) | 45.66 | 0.0155 | 0.0577 | 1.920 | 1.000 | 1.920 |
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| 17 | 147'081 (124'439–183'291) | 18,122.18 | 100'000 (50'000–150'000) | 292.52 (248.64–352.24) | 26.04 | −0.0573 | 0.0360 | 2.606 | 3.000 | 7.818 |
Fig. 1Scatterplot of log10 brain mass (g) against log10 body mass (g) with a PGLS regression lines (phylogenetic generalized least squares). In black is the PGLS regression line for all data points (p value: 0.0148, slope: 0.43978, intercept: 0.24623, adjusted R2: 0.5378), in red the PGLS regression line without Ursus malayanus and Ursus spelaeus (p value: 0.0016, slope: 0.78069, intercept: −1.50995, adjusted R2: 0.8606). The triangles represent the mean for each species on which PGLS was calculated
Results of the pairwise comparisons of slopes and intercepts among different bear species
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| +/− 0.0034 | +/− 0.0366 | +/− 0.0306 | +/− 0.1725***** | +/− 0.1086***** | +/− 0.0596*** | +/− 0.0129 | +/− 0.0347 | |
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| +/− 0.4053 | +/− 0.0400** | +/− 0.0273 | +/− 0.1691***** | +/− 0.1052***** | +/− 0.0630*** | +/− 0.0096 | +/− 0.0380* | |
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| +/− 0.3957 | +/− 0.0096 | +/− 0.0672***** | +/− 0.2091***** | +/− 0.1452***** | +/− 0.0230 | +/− 0.0495***** | +/− 0.0019 | |
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| +/− 0.3362 | +/− 0.0691 | +/− 0.0595 | +/− 0.1419***** | +/− 0.0779***** | +/− 0.0903***** | +/− 0.0177 | +/− 0.0653***** | |
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| +/− 0.3895 | +/− 0.0158 | +/− 0.0062 | +/− 0.0533 | +/− 0.0639***** | +/− 0.2321***** | +/− 0.1596***** | +/− 0.2072***** | |
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| +/− 0.2864 | +/− 0.1189 | +/− 0.1093 | +/− 0.0498 | +/− 0.1031 | +/− 0.1682***** | +/− 0.0956***** | +/− 0.1432***** | |
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| +/− 0.2161 | +/− 0.1892 | +/− 0.1796 | +/− 0.1200 | +/− 0.1734 | +/− 0.0702 | +/− 0.0726***** | +/− 0.0250 | |
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| +/− 0.2497 | +/− 0.1556 | +/− 0.1460 | +/− 0.0865 | +/− 0.1398 | +/− 0.0367 | +/− 0.0335 | +/− 0.0476***** | |
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| +/− 0.1606 | +/− 0.2447 | +/− 0.2351 | +/− 0.1756 | +/− 0.2289 | +/− 0.1258 | +/− 0.0555 | +/− 0.0891 |
Significant results are marked with stars (p-value: *< 0.5, **< 0.1, ***< 0.01, ****< 0.001, *****< 0.0001)
Upper triangle shows intercept comparisons and lower triangle shows slope comparisons
Results of the Kruskal-Wallis rank sum test on the residuals of investigated bear species
| Kruskal-Wallis rank sum test | ||||||||
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| K-W chi-squared: 338.89 df: 8, |
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| 1.0000 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
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| 1.0000 | 0.7560 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
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| 1.0000 | 1.0000 | 1.0000 | - | - | - | - | - |
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| 0.0699 | 0.4557 |
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| - | - | - | - |
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| 1.0000 | 1.0000 |
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| - | - | - |
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| 1.0000 | 1.0000 | 0.8645 | 1.0000 |
| 0.7134 | - | - |
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| 1.0000 | 0.2586 | 1.0000 | 1.0000 |
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| 0.2484 | - |
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| 0.1133 |
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| 0.2602 |
In bold are significant results
Fig. 3Comparison between two methods for estimating brain volumes of Ursidae (asterisks mark significant differences based on a Wilcoxon signed-rank test)
Results of Kendall’s tau on different scores as well as the combination of both
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| tau |
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| 0.1970 | 0.5294 | −0.1360 | 0.7285 | 0.0000 | 1.0000 |
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| 0.3660 | 0.2084 | 0.3400 | 0.2976 |
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In bold are significant correlations